"We cannot watch silently as the Interior Ministry works to
undermine the revolution," Interfax reported Yarosh as
saying. “We demand the immediate resignation of the Interior
Minister Arsen Avakov, and the arrest of the commander of the
Sokol Special Forces and those guilty of [Muzychko’s]
murder."

Earlier Tuesday, right-wing militant leader Muzychko, also known
as Sashko Bilyi, was killed in a police raid against his gang in
Rovno, western Ukraine, Ukraine’s Interior Ministry said in a
statement.

Right Sector leaders threatened Avakov with revenge, though they
did not specify exactly what they would do.

“We will take revenge on Arsen Avakov for the death of our
brother,” said Roman Koval, the Right Sector organizer in
Rovno, charivne.info news portal reported.

Koval claimed that the operation to kill Muzychko was ordered
personally by Avakov, the acting Interior Minister.

Yarosh backed the claim, adding that the party views Muzychko’s
killing as an assassination. The Right Sector leader said that
the party understands that “many want to destabilize the
situation in Ukraine,” but added that the nationalists
“call for peace” and are doing everything in their power
to prevent conflicts.

Muzychko is, however, known for stunts that are far from
peaceful.

Following the coup in Kiev, the far-right militant refused to
give up the weapons which he occasionally used to intimidate
government officials in the city of Rovno, in western Ukraine. He
threatened local authorities with an AK-47
and made openly anti-Semitic statements on videos which were then
posted on YouTube.

Ukraine filed charges of hooliganism and obstructing law
enforcement agencies against Muzychko on March 8. Four days later
he was put on the Ukrainian police’s wanted list.

Ukraine's top cop accepts challenge

Avakov said in a reply to Right Sector that he accepts the
far-right group’s challenge, adding that his stance toward
lawbreakers will be harsh.

"If some gangsters threaten the minister, I accept this
challenge and I am ready to accept any challenge, because that's
my job,” Avakov said in a statement. “Henceforth my
policy will be very harsh toward bandits, toward those who take
up arms to violate order."

By “bandits,” Avakov said he was referring to people who
loot enterprises or homes and possess unregistered guns.

Earlier, Russia put both Muzychnko and Yarosh on the
international wanted list for allegedly torturing and murdering at
least 20 captured Russian soldiers during the first Chechen War
in 1994-1995.

On March 16, Yarosh threatened to sabotage Russian pipelines on the Ukrainian territory.

Yarosh has headed the ultra-right Stepan Bandera All-Ukrainian
Organization Trizub since 2005. During the Maidan protests, the
organization became the basis for the Right Sector movement.

On Saturday, the movement announced it would become a political
party. In a statement it slammed the current
authorities in Kiev and demanded early parliamentary elections,
nominating Yarosh for president.

Right Sector members were very active in the violence which
triggered the ouster of President Viktor Yanukovich. The group’s
fighters used clubs, petrol bombs and firearms against Ukrainian
police and have been wearing Nazi insignia.

“The current government in Kiev came to power with the help
of the Right Sector. They wouldn’t have got the power without the
Right Sector. It was the force that was torching government
buildings, using the violence to get them into power. Now they’ve
become an embarrassment to them. I think there are two reasons
why this has happened.

“First of all the new authorities in Kiev want to get the
Right Sector into government security operator organizations –
they want them to join the National Guard, they want them to lay
down their weapons , because they are frightened that they will
be an alternative force in the country, which could threaten them
in time. I think that the second reason is the PR angle. They are
an embarrassment to the new government in Ukraine, which is being
sold as a wonderfully progressive, democratic government,”
he said.